Study
Genotype data from 'Dense sampling of ethnic groups within African countries reveals fine-scale genetic structure and extensive historical admixture.'
Study ID | Alternative Stable ID | Type |
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EGAS00001006944 | Other |
Study Description
Previous studies have highlighted how African genomes have been shaped by a complex series of historical events. Despite this, genome-wide data has only been obtained from a small proportion of present-day ethnolinguistic groups. By analysing new autosomal genetic variation data of 1333 individuals from over 150 ethnic groups from Cameroon, Republic of the Congo, Ghana, Nigeria and Sudan, we demonstrate a previously underappreciated fine-scale level of
genetic structure within these countries, for example correlating with historical polities in western Cameroon. By comparing genetic variation patterns among populations, we infer that many northern Cameroonian and Sudanese groups share genetic links with multiple geographically disparate populations, likely resulting from long-distance migrations. In Ghana and Nigeria, we infer signatures of intermixing dated to over 2000 years ago, corresponding to reports of environmental transformations possibly related to climate change. We also infer recent intermixing signals in multiple African populations, including Congolese, that likely ... (Show More)
Study Datasets 1 dataset.
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Dataset ID | Description | Technology | Samples |
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EGAD00001010015 |
Genotype data typed on the Human Origins array for 1510 individuals published in "Dense sampling of ethnic groups within African countries reveals fine-scale genetic structure and extensive historical admixture."
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1 |
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